Palliative Care and Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis. Jessica McCannon, MD Director of Critical Care Mount Auburn Hospital
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1 Palliative Care and Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis Jessica McCannon, MD Director of Critical Care Mount Auburn Hospital
2 Outline & goals What is palliative care? Why should it interest my family and me? How can it help? What is the difference between palliative care and hospice? How does palliative care apply specifically to IPF? How can I learn more?
3 The first question Would you accept a palliative care consultation right now?
4 What about this? Would you accept a therapy that would help you and your loved ones cope with your disease, improve your sense of well-being, enhance your quality of life, make you feel better, and perhaps help you live longer?
5 Palliative care: what is it? From the Latin palliare to cloak Specialized medical care for those with serious or chronic illnesses Provides pain and symptom control, communication/coordination, emotional support, family/caregiver support At any stage of illness, in parallel with curative therapies Goal: Wellness, improved quality of life
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7 Palliative care: a team-based approach Physicians Nurses Social workers Massage therapists Physical and occupational therapists Pharmacists Nutritionists Chaplains
8 Are you surprised? Palliative care does not equal End of Life care!
9 What s the difference between palliative care and hospice? Hospice is a palliative care approach at the end of life Focus on managing pain and other symptoms Attending to medical, social, psychological and spiritual needs of patients and families at the end of life Again, a team-based approach Important: Hospice is not a place (but a way of life!) Care can be provided at home, in the hospital, in long-term care facilities and in hospice houses. Criteria = life-limiting progressive illness with 6 months or less to live
10 How does palliative care apply to IPF? Behr et al, Eur Resp J, 2015 Rajala et al, BMC Palliative Care, 2016
11 How does palliative care apply to IPF? Management of cough Management of shortness of breath Treating side effects of therapies Help with decision-making about Life-prolonging interventions (intubation, cardiac resuscitation) Matching goals and values with medical care Hospitalizations Preparing for death
12 Cough Frequent, chronic, and debilitating No benefit from anti-tussives Treatment options Prednisone Opiates Gabapentin Thalidomide Other conditions contributing? Airways disease Albuterol, etc. Reflux/heartburn PPI Sinus disease intranasal steroids
13 Shortness of breath Oxygen Pulmonary rehabilitation Steroids Opiates Treat other diseases (i.e. asthma, COPD) Cold air/fan on face
14 Resuscitation (CPR, intubation) A personal decision Majority of patients who are on ventilator in ICU did not have palliative care services previously Rush et al, Am J Hospice and Pall Med, 2017 Rajala et al, BMC Palliative Care, 2016
15 Prolonged quality (and quantity)
16 Resources
17 Advocate! Palliative care services mostly utilized in patients with cancer However, chronic lung disease patients have Increased burden of symptoms Decreased quality of life Increased social isolation Large proportion of patients with advanced lung disease do not receive advanced care planning or palliative care Ann Am Thorac Soc, 2016
18 Advocate! Ann Am Thorac Soc, 2015
19 Talk about it! Reflect on what is most important to you. Talk to your family and loved ones about it. Talk to your pulmonologist about symptom management. Teach them about what s most important to you (not just symptoms, PFTs and CT scans). Request a palliative care consultation.
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22 Take home points Palliative care is not the same as end-of-life or hospice care Multidisciplinary approach, benefits patients, families At any stage of disease, for any patient Focus on quality of life The earlier the better
23 Questions?
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